The author holds a grayling caught in Alaska. Grayling have an exotic air about them for many anglers in the Lower 48. We've seen them in books and magazines, but they're mostly pictured in far-flung ...
Michigan anglers will be allowed to catch Arctic grayling, an iconic and showy local fish that has largely been lost from state waterways — so long as they toss them right back. The Michigan Natural ...
THOMPSONVILLE, MI - Anglers and environmentalists who are cheering the Arctic grayling’s return to Michigan waters - nearly a century after the once-plentiful fish vanished - now have something ...
MOOSE PASS -- Hiking through a thick field of fireweed blooms in full magenta majesty, the trail opened up to the gin-clear water of Crescent Creek. Bob Duhrkoop, having traveled a long way from ...
BENZIE COUNTY, Mich., (WPBN/WGTU) -- More than 80 years ago the Arctic Grayling fish disappeared from the streams of northern Michigan. Now, Michigan State University's Fisheries Department is ...
State officials have identified warmer lake temperatures as a possible contributing factor to the die-off of hundreds of Arctic grayling this summer. The Peninsula Clarion reports a state Department ...
FAIRBANKS — For the first time since 1990, it likely will be legal to catch and keep an Arctic grayling in the Chena River this summer — but under very specific conditions. A proposal approved by the ...
BRIDGETON TOWNSHIP, Mich. — A species of fish with a tall, iridescent top fin once swam in the Muskegon River and in other cool waterways in Michigan. Nearly a century after its disappearance, the ...
A years-long effort to reintroduce Arctic grayling to Michigan's lakes and streams recently began a new phase, state officials said this month. In a ceremony on May 12, the Department of Natural ...
LANSING — Nicole Watson boarded the plane in Fairbanks, Alaska with delicate and peculiar cargo, a foam box marked "live animals" just small enough to fit under the seat on the long flight to Detroit.
Across Alaska, an array of state budgets are being slashed. But one state resource that will remain constant over the next five years will be the fish the state puts in its waters. In fact, the number ...